Health Blog

Does your child have autism? Personalized treatment plans can support your child’s development

Doctors are diagnosing a growing number of children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD). Currently, 1 in 68 children have one of these conditions, and 30 percent of them remain minimally verbal, even with medical treatment.

If you are raising a child who has been diagnosed with ASD, you understand that there can be difficulties with everyday communication and social interactions that most parents might take for granted. Your child may also have a hard time describing a problem, such as a headache, a cold or any other ailment. This can be frustrating for everyone and can make it more difficult to ensure your child gets needed care.

Fortunately, once children have been diagnosed with ASD, there is a wide range of early treatments and interventions that are available to them, and new innovations are being developed on a regular basis.

A variety of interventions

Helping children with ASD begins with recognizing the range of behaviors the disorder can cause. These may include:

Not pointing at objects that attract attention, or not looking at objects that other people point to

Lack of interest in interacting with others

Avoidance of eye contact

Response to sounds, but not to the speech of others

Trouble expressing needs with either words or motions

Repetitive actions

Stress over changes in routines

A loss of prior skills

There is no one test that can diagnose ASD, but a trained medical professional will know how to spot these behaviors early. This is important because timely intervention may help your child acquire some of the skills that are needed to communicate and interact with other people. There are various approaches that may help, depending on your child’s individual needs.

For example, members of the American Academy of Pediatrics and the National Research Council promote the use of Applied Behavioral Analysis. In general, the related strategies aim to discourage negative behaviors while encouraging positive ones, focusing on verbal communication and learning skills.

Additionally, children may benefit from:

Occupational therapy

Treatment and Education of Autistic and related Communication-handicapped CHildren (TEACCH)

Speech therapy

Sensory integration therapy

Picture Exchange Communication System (PECS)

There are also medications that can help control problems with energy levels, focus, depression and seizures. While some research indicates that certain dietary changes or alternative therapies can be beneficial, these approaches need further study.

As research continues, more innovations become available to help individuals with ASD. Recently, researchers led by the University of California, Los Angeles, conducted an experiment in which 61 children with ASD, ages 5 to 8 years, underwent therapy for communication skills. Half of this group received computer tablets with speech-generating applications to teach them words. By the end of the study period, the researchers observed that those who had tablets were more likely to spontaneously use speech in a social context.

No two children with ASD are alike. If your child was recently diagnosed with ASD, do not feel overwhelmed by the different options for therapy available. It may take time to find what works best for your child, and it will help to have a plan for how to evaluate and approach the various types of therapy, including how to assess gains made. Health advisors can direct you to trained experts who can help with formulating a personalized treatment plan.

Receive our Friday update with ongoing tips for preserving your health and empowering yourself to make more informed healthcare decisions:

You can opt-out of this weekly email at any time. We value your trust and will never spam or sell your email address.

Email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

The firm is now allowing its entire adviser force to refer clients to PinnacleCare, which also created a new elder-care assessment… Many advisers feel that dealing with elder-care issues isn’t their responsibility. But as clients age, “you’re going to be doing this whether you want to or not.”

In a time of serious illness, these advocates can help research new treatments that doctors may not know a lot about, cut through the medical bureaucracy, and perhaps help frame medical decisions more objectively than stressed out patients and their family members. Advocates are not just there to help you heal but also to keep you healthy.

— Anne Tergesen, “Your Guide to the Medical Maze”

Consider hiring a private patient advocate… It could help get you the care you need.

— Judy Foreman, “For when a doctor and a nurse just aren’t enough”

“Pinnacle provided me with a name and with research that said, ‘here’s how other people are going it, and here’s who has the most long-term survivors, and here are their stories.’ What I got from that was hope. Not a bad return on investment.”

— Gregory Taggart, “Deluxe Health Care”

“I always thought the medical staff would return phone calls, answer questions and discuss treatment plans and options. I was wrong.” So the family turned to…PinnacleCare for help. Within one day, a doctor on the company’s staff reviewed her mother’s medical records and set up a conference call with a neurosurgeon from Johns Hopkins and a neurologist from Rush University Medical Center, who agreed to take on the case. “We needed someone on our side.”